Ex Bonds provides no information on its website about who owns or runs the company.

Ex Bonds’ website domain (“exbonds.com”) was privately registered on February 26th, 2020.

Through a corporate address and social media profile locations, Ex Bonds represents it is based out of London, UK.

This is unlikely.

At the time of publication Alexa cites Angola (13%), Venezuela (11%) and Brazil (7%) as the top three sources of traffic to Ex Bonds’ website.

As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.

Ex Bonds’ Products

Ex Bond has no retailable products or services, with affiliates only able to market Ex Bonds affiliate membership itself.

Ex Bonds’ Compensation Plan

Ex Bonds affiliates invest funds on the promise of advertised returns:

  • Standard Plan – invest $10 to $10,000 and receive a 300% ROI over 50 days
  • Premium Plan – invest $10,000 to $100,000 and receive a 350% ROI over 50 days

Note that Ex Bonds charges a 10% fee on all withdrawals.

Referral Commissions

Ex Bonds pays referral commissions on invested funds down three levels of recruitment (unilevel):

  • level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 5%
  • levels 2 and 3 – 1%

Joining Ex Bonds

Ex Bonds affiliate membership is free.

Full participation in the attached income opportunity however requires a minimum $10 investment.

Conclusion

Ex Bonds presents a number of external revenue generation scenarios on its website, but doesn’t represent it engages in any of them.

In any event, there is no evidence Ex Bonds participates in external revenue generation.

Furthermore Ex Bonds business model fails the Ponzi logic test.

If Ex Bonds’ anonymous owners were capable of consistently generating a legitimate 350% ROI every 50 days, what do they need your money for?

Even a modest capital amount compounded at 350% every 50 days soon turns into a fortune.

As it stands the only verifiable source of revenue entering Ex Bonds is new investment.

Using new investment to pay affiliates a ROI over 50 days makes Ex Bonds a Ponzi scheme.

As with all MLM Ponzi schemes, once affiliate recruitment dies down so too will new investment.

This will starve Ex Bonds of ROI revenue, eventually prompting a collapse.

The Math behind Ponzi schemes guarantees that when they collapse, the majority of investors lose money.